Fixing the Rotten Corporate Barrel

By John Cavanagh & Jerry Mander

This article appeared in the December 23, 2002 edition of The Nation.

December 5, 2002

The global corporations of today stand as the dominant institutional force at the center of human activity. Through their market power, billions of dollars in campaign contributions, public relations and advertising, and the sheer scale of their operations, corporations create the visions and institutions we live by and exert enormous influence over most of the political processes that rule us.

It is certainly fair to say, as David Korten and others have, that "global corporate rule" has effectively been achieved. This leaves society in the daunting position of serving a hierarchy of primary corporate values--expanding profit, hypergrowth, environmental exploitation, self-interest, disconnection from communities and workers--that are diametrically opposed to the principles of equity, democracy, transparency and the common good, the core values that can bring social and environmental sustainability to the planet. It is a basic task of any democracy and justice movement to confront the powers of this new global royalty, just as previous generations set out to eliminate the control of monarchies.

The first step in the process is to recognize the systemic nature of the problem. We are used to hearing powers that be--when faced with an Enron or WorldCom scandal--explain them away as simple problems of greedy individuals; the proverbial few rotten apples in the barrel; the exception, not the rule. In reality, the nature of the corporate structure, and the rules by which corporations routinely operate, make socially and environmentally beneficial outcomes the exception, not the norm.

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About John Cavanagh

John Cavanagh is the director of the Institute for Policy Studies and author, with Sarah Anderson of the report, "Lessons of European Integration for the Americas," available at www.ips-dc.org. He is also the author (with others) of Field Guide to the Global Economy (New Press) and co-editor, with Jerry Mander, of Alternatives to Economic Globalization: A Better World Is Possible (Berrett-Koehler). more...

About Jerry Mander

Jerry Mander is currently a senior fellow at the nonprofit Public Media Center in San Francisco and is program director of the Foundation for Deep Ecology. He is a co-founder and chair of the International Forum on Globalization, a new international organization of activists opposed to the global economy, and co-editor, with John Cavanagh, of Alternatives to Economic Globalization. more...
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